Technology, a Distraction from Verbal Communication
June 1, 2015
Weekly, I visit my
grandma where she always puts aside a pile of print materials she knows I will
perhaps want to look at. The other
night, I found myself reading through the entire May 2015 WIRED Magazine. The strange array of articles, ranging from bedbugs,
to oceanographic 3-D photography, to the one article that caught my attention
the most: the Apple Watch.
The
main purpose of the Apple Watch is supposedly to allow users to maintain a
better sense of position in society and not to remain distracted by their
phones. For example, a new text
notification will pop up on the watch and a list of suggested responses will
appear. The user taps the desired
response and the message will send, perhaps looking at the watch for a maximum
of five seconds.
I believe
that this is absurd. Consumers need to
understand technology better. It is
progressing too rapidly that it is in a way brainwashing many to continue
purchasing new technologies without truly realizing their importance in society and their importance for society.
Additionally,
with every purchase of a new cell phone, do you ever wonder where the old one
goes? Yes it may sit in a drawer back at
home, but most likely it will end up in a landfill around the world where the
materials to create the phone are originally extracted. Usually, these locations are in third world
countries suffering from large scale companies exploiting these areas with no
regards to environmental justice.
Am
I saying we should stop using our cell phones altogether? No, but take a moment
to think of material, labor, economic, and social dimensions of your cell
phone. It may greatly surprise you and
inform you, too.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home